Overview

Book Summary

The year is 1863. Homer P. Figg of Pine Swamp, Maine, is suddenly thrust into the turmoil of the times when his older brother, Harold, is sold into service as a Union soldier by their evil uncle, Squinton Leach. Determined to rescue Harold from a likely death on the battlefield, Homer runs away in search of him and is soon captured by bounty hunters tracking down runaway slaves. A kindly Quaker, Jebediah Brewster, whose house is a station on the Underground Railroad, rescues Homer and sends him off again on his quest to find Harold. After an adventure on a steamboat and a stint as the “amazing pig boy” in a medicine show, Homer takes flight in a hot-air balloon and lands in the middle of the Confederate Army.

With a combination of heroism and foolhardiness, Homer steals a pony and rides through the rebel lines straight into the Battle of Gettysburg. He finds Harold and the two fight side-by-side in a bloody charge that helps the Union forces win the day. After the war, the two brothers return to Maine to live with the Brewster family. As Homer says at the end of his mostly true adventures, “We’re all of us haunted by yesterday, and we got no choice but to keep marching into our tomorrows.”

Teaching the Book

Homer P. Figg, a 12-year-old orphan with a lively imagination and a loose regard for the truth, narrates this colorful tale of Civil War-era thieves, scallywags, soldiers, and spies. This award winning book provides an engaging opportunity to teach historical fiction, summarizing, and content-area vocabulary. Students will participate in activities ranging from interacting with a website about the Underground Railroad and Civil War to writing a tall-tale about their own mostly true adventures.

Get Ready to Read

Pre-Reading Activities

Meet-the-Author Book Talk

Where does an author get his or her idea for a book? That is one of the questions most-asked by young readers. In this audio clip, Rodman Philbrick discusses his ideas for The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg. Philbrick introduces the book, shares some of its backstory, and reads the first chapter.

Build Background About the Civil War

After they listen to Philbrick’s introduction, ask students what they know about the Civil War. Clarify their understanding about the two sides of the war—the Union and the Confederacy—by showing this map on the whiteboard or screen. Use its interactive features to acquaint students with the North and the South in 1861.

Vocabulary

Content Area Words

The book is full of vocabulary that describes the history of the United States at the time of the Civil War. Learning the meaning of these words aids students’ comprehension of the novel, as well as, builds their academic vocabularies. Encourage students to use context clues to figure out word meanings, check definitions, and record other unfamiliar words under each of the Civil War-era topics.

Words to Know

Draw a concept map for each of the word concepts—Slavery, Civil War, Historical Terms—using chart paper or a whiteboard. Ask students to suggest words from their lists that connect to each concept. As you add a word to the map, have students explain how it connects to the concept.

As You Read

Reading the Book

Independent Reading

The engaging narrative format of the book lends itself to independent reading by students. Assign students to do a silent reading of the book on their own.

Chunking the Book

Assign the book in four sections, or chunks, for independent reading. After they finish reading a section, have students discuss the book with partners to ask questions and clarify comprehension.

Chunk #1: pp. 1–49

Chunk #2: pp. 50–101

Chunk #3: pp. 102–152

Chunk #4: pp. 153–218

Big Question: Critical Thinking

Ask students to think about this question as they read. Write the question on chart paper or the whiteboard. Do you think Homer P. Figg is a hero?

Comprehension Focus

Summarize

Remind students that a summary is a short statement of the most important ideas or events in a story. Teach students the steps of summarizing, which include:

Identify the main events.

Find the most important details about the event.

Restate the event and important details in a short summary using your own words.

Make sure to remind students to use their own words when summarizing. Point out that summarizing helps them understand and remember books they have read.

Use Resource #2: Summarize to model for students how to restate a short summary in their own words. Pass out copies of the resource to students to use for subsequent parts of the book. Then model for students how to summarize a part of the text. Project the organizer on a whiteboard or screen and fill it out as you model summarizing.

Model: I’m going to summarize what happens in the story from pages 4 to 20. The main event in this part of the book is that Harold is sold into the army and Homer escapes from his uncle. What are the important details? First, Homer and Harold get in trouble with their Uncle Squint. Next, Squint brings men to find the brothers and to swear Harold into the Union Army. Then, after Harold is taken away, Homer is locked in the root cellar. Finally, Homer digs his way out of the cellar and rides away on a horse to find Harold and save him.

Give students a brief oral summary of the story chunk in your own words. Assign them to summarize another important event in the story.

After You Read

Questions to Discuss

Lead students in a discussion of these focus story elements. Ask them to provide textual evidence to support their answers.

1. Historical Fiction

What historical facts have you learned about everyday life in the 1860s? (Sample answers: clothing, transportation, treatment of children.)

2. Summarize

Use your own words to sum up Homer’s flight in the balloon from start to finish. (Sample summary: Homer escapes from the spy hunters by jumping in the hot-air balloon and cutting the anchor. He flies up into the sky, almost falls out of the basket, and then finally lands when the balloon springs a leak and gets caught in trees.)

3. Content Area Words

What color uniform would you wear if you were a Yankee soldier? (Sample answer: a blue uniform.)

Questions to Share

Encourage students to share their responses with a partner or small group.

1. Text-to-Self

How do you feel about Homer P. Figg personally? Would you want to be his friend? Why or why not?

2. Text-to-World

How are the wars you hear about on TV different from the Civil War? How are the weapons different? How do the soldiers fight differently? Which kind of war do you think is worse?

3. Text-to-Text

How is this book different from other historical novels you have read? How is it different from history textbooks?

Content Area Connections

Geography

The Underground Railroad

Students interested in learning more about the Underground Railroad can visit the interactive Scholastic website. Encourage students to share what they learned with the class, summarizing the information about the different stops on the Underground Railroad

History

The Gettysburg Address

Homer P. Figg and his brother, Harold, both survived the Battle of Gettysburg; however, over 51,000 soldiers on both sides died during the battle. Abraham Lincoln honored those dead in his Gettysburg Address. Acquaint students with this important American document by playing a reading by Sam Waterson, an actor who often played Lincoln on stage, which can be found at the NPR website.

Arts

Faces of the Civil War

Matthew Brady and other photographers captured the images of both generals and soldiers during the Civil War. After reading about Homer P. Figg, show students images of the young soldiers in this slideshow of Civil War participants from Time.com. Encourage students to study the photos and connect what they learned from them with what they learned in the novel.

Science

Hot-Air Balloons

One of the most thrilling parts of the book is when Homer takes off in a hot-air balloon. Hot-air balloons were used for a time during the war for spy missions. Challenge interested students to research the science behind hot-air balloons and report on their findings using an annotated diagram.

Extension Activities

Reading/Writing Connection

Point of View

The story is told in first person through Homer’s point of view. Ask students to think about how scenes in the story would be different if they were told from another character’s point of view. For example, how would Frank Nibbly tell the story of tricking Mr. Willow and Homer on the steamship? How would Professor Fleabottom tell the story of using Homer to learn about the Union troops? How would Harold tell the story of the battle at Gettysburg?

Ask students to choose a short scene from the book and rewrite it from another character’s point of view. Remind them to use first person to narrate the story.

Don't Forget the Big Question

Critical Thinking

Give each student an opportunity to answer the big question. Encourage students to support their answers with details and evidence from the text. Tell them there is no one right answer. Do you think Homer P. Figg is a hero?

Big Activity

The Mostly True Adventures of . . .

Give students the opportunity to practice some of Homer Figg’s hilarious truth-stretching tales. Have students write a tall-tale version of an adventure of their own. Reread Homer’s story to Mrs. Bean from the bottom of page 40 to the end of page 41 as inspiration for them. Then challenge students to choose an event from their life to wildly exaggerate, as Homer often does. Make copies of the Big Activity: The Mostly True Adventures of . . . and distribute to students. Encourage them to share the stories they have written.

Storia Enrichments

This Storia e-book has the following enrichments to enhance students’ comprehension of the book.

Word Twister (3)

Word Scramble (2)

Video

Who Said It?

Do You Know?

About the Author

Rodman Philbrick began writing short stories in 6th grade and finished a novel by 11th grade. Although his first novels were rejected, he went on to publish more than a dozen novels for adults before writing Freak the Mighty, which established Philbrick as a new voice in young adult fiction.

The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg grew out of Philbrick’s fascination with the Civil War and his family’s roots in the state of Maine. Philbrick acknowledges that Huck Finn was an inspiration for Homer Figg. The book was chosen as a Newbery Honor Book and an ALA Notable book.

Philbrick has written other novels for young adults, many with the themes of imagination, courage, and childhood conflicts. He has said: “I believe that we have the ability to change our lives using our imaginations. Imagination is a muscle—the more you use it, the stronger it gets.”